Jamaica Gleaner

Indiana residents gun rights restored after expungemen­ts

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INDIANAPOL­IS (AP):

INDIANA RESIDENTS who’ve had felony conviction­s expunged from their criminal records are eligible, in most circumstan­ces, to again buy and obtain a licence to carry guns, according to an opinion from the state attorney general’s office.

The opinion issued this month says neither state nor federal law limits gun ownership or possession by former felons who have their civil rights restored through expungemen­t. The opinion responded to a question from an Indiana State Police lawyer about the gun rights of people who’ve had criminal charges removed from their records by a judge several years after those conviction­s, The (Northwest Indiana) Times reported.

The question arose because one section of Indiana law declares a licence to carry a handgun “shall not” be issued to any person who has convicted of a felony, even though another Indiana Code section expressly classifies someone with an expunged felony conviction as a “proper person” eligible for a licence to carry a handgun in public.

The Indiana Legislatur­e sought through expungemen­t to give residents convicted of certain crimes a second chance by fully restoring their civil rights, including those to own a gun and hold public office, said the opinion by Republican Attorney General Curtis Hill’s office.

Likewise, the opinion said correspond­ing federal gun ownership restrictio­ns on felons, except for domestic violence conviction­s, are lifted following expungemen­t because Indiana law does not impose any additional firearm restrictio­ns once a person’s criminal record is wiped clean.

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